Time on Fire Contents page for Time on Fire (1961) |
| Author | Thomas Shapcott |
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| Language | English |
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| Genre | Poetry collection |
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| Publisher | Jacaranda press |
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Publication date | 1961 |
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| Publication place | Australia |
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| Media type | Print |
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| Pages | 88 pp |
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| Preceded by | – |
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| Followed by | The Mankind Thing |
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Time on Fire (1961) is the debut collection of poems by Australian poet Thomas Shapcott. It won the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry in 1961.[1]
The collection includes 61 poems by the author that are reprinted from various sources, although some are published here for the first time.[1]
Contents
- "Sonnet"
- "River Scene"
- "Denmark Hill"
- "The Fifth of November"
- "Late Winter, Queensland"
- "Lake Swans"
- "At Night, Footsteps"
- "The Sleeping Trees"
- "Columbine"
- "Mt. Flinders"
- "Hawk"
- "Water Skier"
- "Mt. Glorious"
- "Blue Mountains After Rain"
- "Virgin Forest, Southern New South Wales"
- "The Waves"
- "Beyond My Love"
- "Time on Fire"
- "The Finches"
- "Evergreen"
- "Skin Diver"
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- "Winter Westerlies"
- "Autumn Grasses"
- "White Cedar in Winter"
- "Idyll"
- "Dead House in the Hills"
- "The Lake in Winter"
- "Rhapsody on the Shortest Day"
- "Stranger in the City"
- "Woman in the Bar"
- "American Sailor in Hyde Park"
- "Aspect of Truth : A Small City Park"
- "Suburb"
- "New Australian in the Park"
- "At Neutral Bay"
- "La Glutton, in Suburb"
- "Lullaby"
- "Song"
- "Traditional Song"
- "Secrecy"
- "Spring"
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- "Music at Night"
- "High Tide"
- "At the Bay"
- "Lonely Bay"
- "Beyond Any Bright Dexterity"
- "Goodbye Message"
- "Message to London"
- "Return"
- "Car Journey"
- "Reunion (Nocturne)"
- "Sheep Country in Spring"
- "In Your Lands
- "Windy Hill"
- "Sonnet for an Engagement"
- "Genesis"
- "At North Head, Late Spring"
- "Love Poem Written after Rain"
- "On the Beach"
- "Bells (Three extracts from a Marriage Sequence)"
- "Content"
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Critical reception
While reviewing a subsequent volume of poems in The Canberra Times, the critic T. Inglis Moore noted: "In his initial Time on Fire he emerged as a fresh and lively lyricist, with a flexibility of rhythms that reminded one of Dylan Thomas. He tackled urban and rural themes alike with sensitivity and a sharp, reflective intelligence. In his first book and its successors there were, however, certain weaknesses – sometimes the fluidity fell into facility or looseness, the originality into word play for its own sake, the search for meanings into obscurity."[2]
The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature referred to the collection as being "largely autobiographical, reflecting the country boy's distaste for the garish city environment; the wakening of young love; courtship, marriage, parenthood; and a preoccupation with transience."[3]
See also
References
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| 1947–1949 | |
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| 1950–1959 | |
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| 1960–1969 | |
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| 1970–1979 | |
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| 1980–1989 | |
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| 1990–1999 |
- No award (1990)
- Dog Fox Field by Les Murray (1991)
- Empire of Grass by Gary Catalano (1992)
- Peniel by Kevin Hart (1992)
- The End of the Season by Philip Hodgins (1993)
- No award (1994)
- New and Selected Poems by Kevin Hart (1995)
- Flying the Coop : New and Selected Poems 1972-1994 by Rhyll McMaster (1995)
- Path of Ghosts: poems 1986-93 by Jemal Sharah (1995)
- No award (1996)
- The Undertow: New and Selected Poems by John Kinsella (1997)
- No award (1998)
- No award (1999)
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| 2000–2009 | |
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| 2010–present |
- Patience, Mutiny by LK Holt (2010)
- Phantom Limb by David Musgrave (2010)
- The Simplified World by Petra White (2010)
- No award (2011)
- Raw Shock by Toby Fitch (2012)
- Autoethnographic by Michael Brennan (2012)
- The Collected Blue Hills by Laurie Duggan (2012)
- Jaguar's Dream by John Kinsella (2012)
- Another Fine Morning in Paradise by Michael Sharkey (2012)
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